The New Zealand Herald

Kiwi savers

Can we keep our national bird from extinction?

- The road to recovery

The fight for our national icon

Two years ago, New Zealand hatched a plan to reverse the decline of its native bird — to get 100,000 kiwi scratching around in the bush by 2030. Are we any closer? In the first of a two-part series, Jamie Morton looks at how close kiwi have come to the brink — and how you can help save them.

Amid South Waikato’s gently rolling landscape, Sanctuary Mountain Maungataut­ari cuts an imposing figure. The deep-green forest that surrounds this craggy, mist-covered mountain is as close to New Zealand’s prehistori­c wilderness as you’re likely to get — and it’s been carefully kept that way.

The 3400ha mountain and its 47km boundary remarkably stands as the largest pest-proof fenced project in the world, offering a rare mainland refuge for ko¯ kako, hihi, takahe¯ , ka¯ ka¯ riki — and now — one little western brown kiwi chick named Tahi.

Conservati­onists recently marked the 8-month-old bird’s arrival with a po¯ whiri, before carrying him up the mountain to his new home, a burrow shaded by a patch of fern.

As his name symbolised, Tahi was a first; not of his rare sub-species on the maunga, where about 200 already roamed, but of 500 more to be introduced there over the next five years.

The fortress has an estimated carrying capacity of 690 pairs of kiwi, and when it reaches half capacity — around 325 pairs — birds will begin to be moved off the mountain to begin population­s in other predatorco­ntrolled areas.

That’s why it’s been chosen as something of a jump-off point for a national effort to turn the kiwi’s 2 per cent annual loss rate into a 2 per cent annual increase.

In Tahi’s case, Horowhenua residents Will and Jan Abel had bought a block of land near Raetihi and were surprised at how many kiwi lived on it.

When asked if they wanted to get involved in the national effort to save the birds, they jumped at the chance.

After seven years of learning about kiwi conservati­on and running a trapping programme with neighbours and Horizons Regional Council, the couple farewelled the first chick from their land to be part of the national programme — Tahi.

The egg, produced late last year, was uplifted from their block and taken to Otorohanga where it was hatched in January of this year, before spending six months at Rotokare Scenic Reserve.

Michelle Impey, executive director of the charity Kiwis for Kiwi, said this bird represents a whole new approach to tackling declining kiwi population­s.

“We have changed the way we’re doing things in order to make the most of opportunit­ies offered by others.”

Using Operation Nest Egg, chicks hatched from wild-collected eggs will be incubated in captivity and released into existing predator-free habitats where they can breed in a safe environmen­t.

“Once we have grown those areas near to capacity, we can then relocate some of the offspring to start new families in other places,” she said.

“By increasing the supply chain and getting these kohanga kiwi sites to capacity more quickly, we can now do in five to 10 years what would have taken 50 years or more.”

The strategy’s success or failure depended on many groups — the Department of Conservati­on (DoC), iwi, private landowners, regional councils, hatching facilities and countless volunteers — all coming together for the cause.

Being able to stop the decline — let alone build the total kiwi population to 100,000 by 2030, as is the key goal of DoC’s draft Kiwi Recovery Plan — would be a monumental feat.

A legacy of loss

To understand why is to understand what has pushed down numbers to just around 70,000.

For millions of years, kiwi thrived in a well-suited, threat-free habitat alongside a multitude of other species now either lost or driven to the brink.

With millions of these birds scratching around in New Zealand’s

ancient undergrowt­h, it’s difficult to imagine what the nocturnal chorus might have sounded like.

This picture began to change dramatical­ly, of course, when human settlers first arrived.

The destructio­n reached a new level in the late 1800s, when mammalian predators introduced to control rabbits instead found a buffet of flightless birds that relied on camouflage as a means of defence — something not so effective against a ground-dwelling predator with a keen sense of smell.

When the scale of the massacre had been properly understood, it was estimated the population had fallen to 100,000, with an annual decline rate of 4 per cent.

While numbers had plunged further, DoC’s response of establishi­ng a network of five kiwi sanctuarie­s in Whanga¯ rei, Coromandel, Tongariro, Haast and Okarito eventually halved the loss rate.

The threat, meanwhile, remained much the same.

An average of 27 kiwi were killed by predators every week — driving a population decline of around 1400 birds every year.

Kiwi researcher­s’ best estimates are that New Zealand’s kiwi population was 67,550 in 2015 — that’s fewer than the estimated 73,000 in 2008.

Their estimate was that, if the current management of each subspecies was maintained for the next 15 years, the total kiwi population would be more or less stable.

Since 2000, population declines had been turned around for the four rarest — rowi, Haast tokoeka, Coromandel brown kiwi and little spotted kiwi — and reduced for others.

However, fewer than a quarter of New Zealand kiwi lived in places where predators were controlled.

More than three-quarters of kiwi didn’t have this level of protection, so many population­s continued to decline.

Across all 10 kiwi species, the proportion of each population under active management varied greatly, but generally the smaller the percentage under active management.

The species with the largest number of birds under active management was the Northland brown — an estimated 4075 kiwi, nearly half of its population.

That with the smallest number actively managed is the Rakiura (Stewart Island) tokoeka — with just 250 birds out of an estimated population of 13,000, just 1.9 per cent.

Still, the size of individual kiwi population­s wasn’t precisely known because there wasn’t yet a costeffect­ive way to count kiwi.

What was known was that the biggest threat the birds faced was being killed by pest mammals.

Simply put: protecting habitat without reducing the number of predators would not save kiwi.

Stoats and feral cats posed the biggest risk to chicks, while dogs and ferrets were a particular danger to adults.

“None of these have been eliminated from the ‘list of most wanted’ but of course in specific areas where there is pest and predator control, they are being eliminated or reduced,” Impey said.

And many dog owners sadly remained oblivious to the deadly threat their animals pose to kiwi.

“The challenge is that some people are simply unaware — they don’t know the harm dogs can do to kiwi.

“Some people know but don’t think their dog would do it — and worse

yet are people who know but don’t care.

“I believe we just have to keep trying to have open, honest discussion­s and not create a sense of ‘us vs them’ with dog owners.”

DoC’s draft 10-year plan, unveiled in October 2016, proved the first to assess the actual sustainabi­lity of current efforts, and to look beyond simply slowing or halting kiwi decline to actual growth.

Backed by a new $3.6 million programme, the DoC strategy further aspired to restore the national distributi­on of all species of kiwi and maintain their genetic diversity.

By 2030, DoC wanted species population­s rebuilt to 35,400 brown kiwi, 35,000 tokoeka, 2900 little spotted kiwi, 19,900 great spotted kiwi and 900 rowi.

The cost of the work, estimated at a further $1.6m than what’s spent annually, was being mostly met by an $11.2m bag of rescue money included in 2015’s Budget, with an annual shortfall of $1.3m raised primarily by Kiwis for Kiwi.

The plan was to work in step with wider efforts working towards the

Government’s goal of zero predators by 2050, coming with a separate investment of $28m, with around 100 community conservati­on groups playing a role alongside large-scale pest control operations.

Kiwis for Kiwi’s own national strategy, launched last year, focused on boosting the number of kiwi chicks in predator-free creches where they could safely grow and start reproducin­g, so their young could be moved to other predator-free areas to start new population­s.

Its chairman, Sir Rob Fenwick, described it as like “setting up an endowment fund for kiwi”.

With Tahi’s exciting new life amid the bush at Maungataut­ari, it was already starting to pay off.

“The birds will flourish in a safe environmen­t, the gene pool will be improved and this is a pragmatic and economical­ly viable approach to putting a dent in the 2 per cent decline of kiwi,” Will Abel said.

“There’s nothing about this that doesn’t make sense. While the land belongs to us, the project belongs to the wider team and the birds belong to New Zealand.

“We look forward to welcoming back Tahi’s offspring in due course.”

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 ??  ?? Tahi the kiwi chick has a new home at Sanctuary Mountain Maungataut­ari — a burrow shaded by a patch of fern.
Tahi the kiwi chick has a new home at Sanctuary Mountain Maungataut­ari — a burrow shaded by a patch of fern.
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Herald graphic
 ??  ?? Jan Abel, left, who owns the land where Tahi came from.with Craig Montgomeri­e of Sanctuary Mountain Maungataut­ari and Michelle Impey of Kiwis for Kiwi.
Jan Abel, left, who owns the land where Tahi came from.with Craig Montgomeri­e of Sanctuary Mountain Maungataut­ari and Michelle Impey of Kiwis for Kiwi.

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